Love poems written by Li Bai when it snows.

In Li Bai's poems, there are many wines, many months and many swords, but few of them directly write about snow:

Popular in the north

Candle dragon lives in a cold door, and its brilliance is still blooming.

Why don't the sun and the moon shine like this? Only the north wind came up angrily.

Yanshan snowflakes are as big as seats, and pieces of them blow off XuanYuanTai.

You miss your wife in December. Stop singing and laugh.

Looking at the pedestrians by the door, it's sad to miss the Great Wall.

Don't mention the sword to save the border pass, but leave the tiger, gold and hairpin.

There is a white arrow in the forest, spiders spin webs and dust.

The arrow is not empty, people die today and never come back.

I can't bear to see this thing, it has burned to ashes.

The yellow river can hold soil, and the north wind hates rain and snow.

Popular North is an ancient poem written by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, with the theme of ancient Yuefu. By describing a northern woman's grief and indignation at her husband's death, this poem exposes and criticizes An Lushan's crime of creating ethnic disputes and provoking war disasters in the north. Starting from the general theme of "hurting the north wind, rain and snow, pedestrians don't return", the poet turned the stone into gold and excavated a new theme of accusing war crimes and sympathizing with people's suffering, thus giving it much deeper ideological significance than the original work. The whole poem is full of letters and strokes, and sometimes there are amazing quips; Natural and smooth, no chisel marks. It captures the action of burning white arrows to describe the contradictory psychological state of thinking of women and people, and the metaphor of holding soil to plug the Yellow River highlights the resentment of thinking of women, which has strong artistic appeal. Others, such as "Yanshan snowflakes are as big as seats, and pieces of them blow down the Xuanyuan terrace", have always been called exaggerated patterns and metaphors in poetry.